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Abstraction with Gridlines

Artist: Lumen Winter (1908 - 1982)
Dimensions: 7.48 x 24.5 in. (19 x 62.23 cm)
Object Type: Painting
Creation Place: North America, United States
Medium and Support: Gouache and pastel on paper
Credit Line: Gift of Alexander Katlan in memory of his parents, Dr. Nathaniel R. and Lucille Katlan, R.N., and his sister, Dr. Roberta Katlan Helfgott
Accession Number: 2016.03.02
This work is not currently on view






Keywords

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paintings
Unique works in which images are formed primarily by the direct application of pigments suspended in oil, water, egg yolk, molten wax, or other liquid, arranged in masses of color, onto a generally two-dimensional surface.
drawings
Visual works produced by drawing, which is the application of lines on a surface, often paper, by using a pencil, pen, chalk, or some other tracing instrument to focus on the delineation of form rather than the application of color. This term is often defined broadly to refer to computer-generated images as well.
abstract
Genre of visual arts in which figurative subjects or other forms are simplified or changed in their representation so that they do not portray a recognizable person, object, thing, etc.; may reference an idea, quality, or state rather than a concrete object. For the process of formulating general concepts by abstracting common properties of instances, prefer "abstraction." For 20th-century art styles that were a reaction against the traditional European conception of art as the imitation of nature, use "Abstract (fine arts style)."
twentieth century
Century in the proleptic Gregorian calendar including the years 1900 to 1999 (or 1901 to 2000).
gouache
A method of painting with matte, opaque watercolor paint. Gouache painting employs opaque layers of color rather than the transparent washes used in the aquarelle technique, due to the differing pigment densities of the media.

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